19 results on '"Rueckriegel SM"'
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2. Loss of fractional anisotropy of supratentorial tracts correlates significantly with impaired cognitive and fine motor function
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Rueckriegel, SM, Bruhn, H, Henze, G, and Driever, PH
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ddc: 610 ,610 Medical sciences ,Medicine - Abstract
Objective: Tumor and therapy-associated neurotoxic effects including local pressure and hypoperfusion, internal hydrocephalus, surgery, and adjuvant treatment cause brain damage in pediatric patients with posterior fossa tumors. Treatment related toxicity factors are resection in pilocytic astrocytoma[for full text, please go to the a.m. URL], 61. Jahrestagung der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Neurochirurgie (DGNC) im Rahmen der Neurowoche 2010
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- 2010
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3. Impairment of executive functions in pediatric posterior fossa tumor survivors
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Koustenis, E, primary, Hernáiz Driever, P, additional, Henze, G, additional, De Sonneville, L, additional, and Rueckriegel, SM, additional
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- 2010
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4. Development of Laterality and Bimanual Interference of Fine Motor Movements in Childhood and Adolescence.
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Nájera Chávez BC, Rueckriegel SM, Burghardt R, and Hernáiz Driever P
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- Adolescent, Biomechanical Phenomena, Handwriting, Humans, Motor Skills, Movement, Psychomotor Performance, Functional Laterality, Hand
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Drawing and handwriting are fine motor skills acquired during childhood. We analyzed the development of laterality by comparing the performance of the dominant with the nondominant hand and the effect of bimanual interference in kinematic hand movement parameters (speed, automation, variability, and pressure). Healthy subjects (n = 187, 6-18 years) performed drawing tasks with both hands on a digitizing tablet followed by performance in the presence of an interfering task of the nondominant hand. Age correlated positively with speed, automation, and pressure, and negatively with variability for both hands. As task complexity increased, differences between both hands were less pronounced. Playing an instrument had a positive effect on the nondominant hand. Speed and automation showed a strong association with lateralization. Bimanual interference was associated with an increase of speed and variability. Maturation of hand laterality and the extent of bimanual interference in fine motor tasks are age-dependent processes.
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- 2021
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5. Mapping of long-term cognitive and motor deficits in pediatric cerebellar brain tumor survivors into a cerebellar white matter atlas.
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Grosse F, Rueckriegel SM, Thomale UW, and Hernáiz Driever P
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- Brain Mapping, Cerebellum diagnostic imaging, Child, Cognition, Humans, Survivors, Cerebellar Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Medulloblastoma complications, Medulloblastoma diagnostic imaging, White Matter diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Purpose: Diaschisis of cerebrocerebellar loops contributes to cognitive and motor deficits in pediatric cerebellar brain tumor survivors. We used a cerebellar white matter atlas and hypothesized that lesion symptom mapping may reveal the critical lesions of cerebellar tracts., Methods: We examined 31 long-term survivors of pediatric posterior fossa tumors (13 pilocytic astrocytoma, 18 medulloblastoma). Patients underwent neuronal imaging, examination for ataxia, fine motor and cognitive function, planning abilities, and executive function. Individual consolidated cerebellar lesions were drawn manually onto patients' individual MRI and normalized into Montreal Neurologic Institute (MNI) space for further analysis with voxel-based lesion symptom mapping., Results: Lesion symptom mapping linked deficits of motor function to the superior cerebellar peduncle (SCP), deep cerebellar nuclei (interposed nucleus (IN), fastigial nucleus (FN), ventromedial dentate nucleus (DN)), and inferior vermis (VIIIa, VIIIb, IX, X). Statistical maps of deficits of intelligence and executive function mapped with minor variations to the same cerebellar structures., Conclusion: We identified lesions to the SCP next to deep cerebellar nuclei as critical for limiting both motor and cognitive function in pediatric cerebellar tumor survivors. Future strategies safeguarding motor and cognitive function will have to identify patients preoperatively at risk for damage to these critical structures and adapt multimodal therapeutic options accordingly., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
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- 2021
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6. Motor function in survivors of pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia treated with chemotherapy-only.
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Goebel AM, Koustenis E, Rueckriegel SM, Pfuhlmann L, Brandsma R, Sival D, Skarabis H, Schuelke M, and Hernáiz Driever P
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- Adolescent, Child, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Prospective Studies, Antineoplastic Agents adverse effects, Cancer Survivors, Motor Skills Disorders chemically induced, Motor Skills Disorders epidemiology, Precursor Cell Lymphoblastic Leukemia-Lymphoma drug therapy
- Abstract
Background: Up to 43% of survivors of pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) may exhibit fine-motor problems. Information on manual dexterity in this cohort is still limited., Objectives: We tested survivors of childhood ALL treated with chemotherapy-only for fine-motor function in terms of drawing and handwriting abilities using a Digitizing Tablet (DT) with three tasks for drawing and handwriting of varying complexity, for ataxia using the International Cooperative Ataxia Rating Scale (ICARS), and for tremor and hand-eye coordination using the Nine Hole Steadiness Tester (NHST)., Results: We examined a cohort of non-irradiated survivors (n = 31) after a median time of 3.5 years after end of therapy. In all tasks of the DT the cohort demonstrated significant (p < 0.05) impairment of speed, automation, and variability in at least two tasks and significantly more pressure. Impaired speed (SPV) inversely correlated with lag time since end of therapy. Dexterity performance of six survivors (19%) lay below the 5th percentile. No survivor exhibited ataxia, tremor, or impaired hand-steadiness., Conclusion: Despite the absence of gross ataxia, tremor, and impaired hand-eye coordination, we nevertheless detected significant fine-motor impairment in a relevant number of survivors of childhood ALL. Prospective studies are needed to reveal the pathophysiological underpinnings and genetic risk factors for development of such deficits due to ALL and its treatment., (Copyright © 2018 European Paediatric Neurology Society. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2019
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7. Selective Brain Cooling after Traumatic Brain Injury: Effects of Three Different Cooling Methods-Case Report.
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Westermaier T, Nickl R, Koehler S, Fricke P, Stetter C, Rueckriegel SM, and Ernestus RI
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- Brain physiopathology, Brain surgery, Brain Injuries, Traumatic physiopathology, Decompressive Craniectomy, Epidural Space, Humans, Scalp, Skull, Therapeutic Irrigation, Brain Injuries, Traumatic surgery, Hypothermia, Induced methods
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Background In experimental models of neuronal damage, therapeutic hypothermia proved to be a powerful neuroprotective method. In clinical studies of traumatic brain injury (TBI), this very distinct effect was not reproducible. Several meta-analyses draw different conclusions about whether therapeutic hypothermia can improve outcome after TBI. Adverse side effects of systemic hypothermia, such as severe pneumonia, have been held responsible by some authors to counteract the neuroprotective effect. Selective brain cooling (SBC) attempts to take advantage of the protective effects of therapeutic hypothermia without the adverse side effects of systemic hypothermia. Methods Three different methods of SBC were applied in a patient who had severe TBI with recurrent increases of intracranial pressure (ICP) refractory to conventional forms of treatment: (1) external cooling of the scalp and neck using ice packs prior to hemicraniectomy, (2) external cooling of the craniectomy defect using ice packs after hemicraniectomy, and (3) cooling by epidural irrigation with cold Ringer solution after hemicraniectomy. Results External scalp cooling before hemicraniectomy, external cooling of the craniectomy defect, and epidural irrigation with cold fluid resulted in temperature differences (brain temperature to body temperature) of - 0.2°, - 0.7°, and - 3.6°C, respectively. ICP declined with decreasing brain temperature. Conclusion Previous external cooling attempts for SBC faced the problem that brain temperature could not be lowered without a simultaneous decrease of systemic temperature. After hemicraniectomy, epidural irrigation with cold fluid may be a simple and effective way to lower ICP and apply one of the most powerful methods of cerebroprotection after severe TBI., Competing Interests: Disclosure The authors report no conflicts of interest in this work., (Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York.)
- Published
- 2017
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8. Cognitive and fine motor deficits in a pediatric sickle cell disease cohort of mixed ethnic origin.
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Burkhardt L, Lobitz S, Koustenis E, Rueckriegel SM, and Hernáiz Driever P
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- Adolescent, Anemia, Sickle Cell diagnosis, Child, Cognition Disorders diagnosis, Cohort Studies, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Motor Disorders diagnosis, Retrospective Studies, Anemia, Sickle Cell ethnology, Cognition Disorders ethnology, Ethnicity, Motor Disorders ethnology
- Abstract
Cerebrovascular disease is an important feature of pediatric sickle cell disease (SCD) and may lead to cognitive and motor impairment. Our cross-sectional study examined the incidence and severity of these impairments in a pediatric cohort without clinical cerebrovascular events from Berlin of mixed ethnic origin. Thirty-two SCD patients (mean age 11.14 years, range 7.0-17.25 years; males 14) were evaluated for full-scale intelligence (IQ) (German version WISC-III), fine motor function (digital writing tablet), and executive function (planning, attention, working memory, and visual-spatial abilities) with the Amsterdam Neuropsychological Tasks (ANT) program and the Tower of London (ToL). Data on clinical risk factors were retrieved from medical records. Full-scale IQ of patients was preserved, whereas performance IQ was significantly reduced (91.19 (SD 12.17) d = 0.7, p = 0.007). SCD patients scored significantly lower than healthy peers when tested for executive and fine motor functions, e.g., planning time in the ToL (6.73 s (SD 3.21) vs. 5.9 s in healthy peers (SD 2.33), d = 0.5, p = <0.001) and frequency on the writing tablet (mean z score -0.79, d = 0.7, p < 0.001). No clinical risk factors were significantly associated with incidence and severity of cognitive and motor deficits. Despite the preservation of full-scale IQ, our SCD cohort of mixed origin exhibited inferior executive abilities and reduced fine motor skills. Our study is limited by the small size of our cohort as well as the lack for control of sociodemographic and socioeconomic factors modulating higher functions but highlights the need for early screening, prevention, and specific interventions for these deficits.
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- 2017
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9. DTI fiber tractography of cerebro-cerebellar pathways and clinical evaluation of ataxia in childhood posterior fossa tumor survivors.
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Oh ME, Driever PH, Khajuria RK, Rueckriegel SM, Koustenis E, Bruhn H, and Thomale UW
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- Adolescent, Astrocytoma complications, Astrocytoma diagnostic imaging, Ataxia diagnostic imaging, Ataxia etiology, Cancer Survivors, Cerebellar Neoplasms complications, Cerebellar Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Cerebellum diagnostic imaging, Cerebral Cortex diagnostic imaging, Child, Child, Preschool, Diffusion Tensor Imaging, Female, Humans, Infratentorial Neoplasms complications, Infratentorial Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Male, Medulloblastoma complications, Medulloblastoma diagnostic imaging, Neural Pathways diagnostic imaging, Neural Pathways pathology, Astrocytoma pathology, Ataxia pathology, Cerebellar Neoplasms pathology, Cerebellum pathology, Cerebral Cortex pathology, Infratentorial Neoplasms pathology, Medulloblastoma pathology
- Abstract
Pediatric posterior fossa (PF) tumor survivors experience long-term motor deficits. Specific cerebrocerebellar connections may be involved in incidence and severity of motor dysfunction. We examined the relationship between long-term ataxia as well as fine motor function and alteration of differential cerebellar efferent and afferent pathways using diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) and tractography. DTI-based tractography was performed in 19 patients (10 pilocytic astrocytoma (PA) and 9 medulloblastoma patients (MB)) and 20 healthy peers. Efferent Cerebello-Thalamo-Cerebral (CTC) and afferent Cerebro-Ponto-Cerebellar (CPC) tracts were reconstructed and analyzed concerning fractional anisotropy (FA) and volumetric measurements. Clinical outcome was assessed with the International Cooperative Ataxia Rating Scale (ICARS). Kinematic parameters of fine motor function (speed, automation, variability, and pressure) were obtained by employing a digitizing graphic tablet. ICARS scores were significantly higher in MB patients than in PA patients. Poorer ICARS scores and impaired fine motor function correlated significantly with volume loss of CTC pathway in MB patients, but not in PA patients. Patients with pediatric post-operative cerebellar mutism syndrome showed higher loss of CTC pathway volume and were more atactic. CPC pathway volume was significantly reduced in PA patients, but not in MB patients. Neither relationship was observed between the CPC pathway and ICARS or fine motor function. There was no group difference of FA values between the patients and healthy peers. Reduced CTC pathway volumes in our cohorts were associated with severity of long-term ataxia and impaired fine motor function in survivors of MBs. We suggest that the CTC pathway seems to play a role in extent of ataxia and fine motor dysfunction after childhood cerebellar tumor treatment. DTI may be a useful tool to identify relevant structures of the CTC pathway and possibly avoid surgically induced long-term neurological sequelae.
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- 2017
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10. Probabilistic Fiber-Tracking Reveals Degeneration of the Contralateral Auditory Pathway in Patients with Vestibular Schwannoma.
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Rueckriegel SM, Homola GA, Hummel M, Willner N, Ernestus RI, and Matthies C
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- Anisotropy, Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Auditory Pathways diagnostic imaging, Auditory Pathways pathology, Diffusion Tensor Imaging methods, Neuroma, Acoustic diagnostic imaging, Neuroma, Acoustic pathology
- Abstract
Background and Purpose: Vestibular schwannomas cause progressive hearing loss by direct damage to the vestibulocochlear nerve. The cerebral mechanisms of degeneration or plasticity are not well-understood. Therefore, the goal of our study was to show the feasibility of probabilistic fiber-tracking of the auditory pathway in patients with vestibular schwannomas and to compare the ipsi- and contralateral volume and integrity, to test differences between the hemispheres., Materials and Methods: Fifteen patients with vestibular schwannomas were investigated before surgery. Diffusion-weighted imaging (25 directions) was performed on a 3T MR imaging system. Probabilistic tractography was performed for 3 partial sections of the auditory pathway. Volume and fractional anisotropy were determined and compared ipsilaterally and contralaterally. The laterality ratio was correlated with the level of hearing loss., Results: Anatomically reasonable tracts were depicted in all patients for the acoustic radiation. Volume was significantly decreased on the hemisphere contralateral to the tumor side for the acoustic radiation and diencephalic section, while fractional anisotropy did not differ significantly. Tracking did not yield meaningful tracts in 3 patients for the thalamocortical section and in 5 patients for the diencephalic section. No statistically significant correlations between the laterality quotient and classification of hearing loss were found., Conclusions: For the first time, this study showed that different sections of the auditory pathway between the inferior colliculus and the auditory cortex can be visualized by using probabilistic tractography. A significant volume decrease of the auditory pathway on the contralateral hemisphere was observed and may be explained by transsynaptic degeneration of the crossing auditory pathway., (© 2016 by American Journal of Neuroradiology.)
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- 2016
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11. Feasibility of the Combined Application of Navigated Probabilistic Fiber Tracking and Navigated Ultrasonography in Brain Tumor Surgery.
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Rueckriegel SM, Linsenmann T, Kessler AF, Homola GA, Bartsch AJ, Ernestus RI, Westermaier T, and Löhr M
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- Adult, Aged, Combined Modality Therapy methods, Data Interpretation, Statistical, Echoencephalography methods, Feasibility Studies, Female, Humans, Imaging, Three-Dimensional methods, Male, Middle Aged, Neurosurgical Procedures, Pattern Recognition, Automated, Reproducibility of Results, Sensitivity and Specificity, Treatment Outcome, White Matter pathology, Brain Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Brain Neoplasms surgery, Diffusion Tensor Imaging methods, Glioma diagnostic imaging, Glioma surgery, Surgery, Computer-Assisted methods
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Background: Surgical resection of intra-axial tumors is a challenging procedure because of indistinct tumor margins, infiltration, and displacement of white matter tracts surrounding the lesion. Hence, gross total tumor resection without causing new neurologic deficits is demanding, especially in tumor sites adjoining eloquent structures. Feasibility of the combination of navigated probabilistic fiber tracking to identify eloquent fiber pathways and navigated ultrasonography to control brain shift was tested., Methods: Eleven patients with lesions adjacent to eloquent white matter structures (pyramidal tract, optic radiation and arcuate fascicle) were preoperatively subjected to magnetic resonance imaging including diffusion-weighted imaging on a 3-T magnetic resonance system (Trio [Siemens, Erlangen, Germany]). Probabilistic fiber tracking was performed using the tools of the FMRIB Software Library (FSL). Results of probabilistic fiber tracking and high-resolution anatomic images were integrated into the neuronavigation system Stealth Station (Medtronic, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA) together with the navigated ultrasonography (SonoNav [Medtronic])., Results: FSL-based probabilistic fiber tracking depicted the pyramidal tract, the optic radiation, and arcuate fascicle anatomically plausibly. Integration of the probabilistic fiber tracking into neuronavigation was technically feasible and allowed visualization of the reconstructed fiber pathways. Navigated ultrasonography controlled brain shift., Conclusions: Integration of probabilistic fiber tracking and navigated ultrasonography into intraoperative neuronavigation facilitated anatomic orientation during glioma resection. FSL-based probabilistic fiber tracking integrated sophisticated fiber tracking algorithms, including modeling of crossing fibers. Combination with navigated ultrasonography provided a three-dimensional estimation of intraoperative brain shift and, therefore, improved the reliability of neuronavigation., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2016
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12. Autologous bone graft versus PEKK cage for vertebral replacement after 1- or 2-level anterior median corpectomy.
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Koehler S, Raslan F, Stetter C, Rueckriegel SM, Ernestus RI, and Westermaier T
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OBJECT Anterior cervical corpectomy with fusion has become the most widely used procedure for the treatment of multilevel cervical stenosis. Although an autologous bone graft is the gold standard for vertebral replacement after corpectomy, industrial implants have become popular because they result in no donor-site morbidity. In this study, the authors compared clinical and radiological results of autologous iliac grafts versus those of bone-filled polyetherketoneketone (PEKK) cage implants. METHODS The clinical and radiological data of 46 patients with degenerative multilevel cervical stenosis and who underwent 1- or 2-level anterior median corpectomy between 2004 and 2012 were analyzed. The patients in Group 1 were treated with vertebral replacement with an autologous iliac graft, and those in Group 2 were treated with a PEKK cage implant. Each patient also underwent osteosynthesis with an anterior plate-screw system. Visual analog scale (VAS) and European Myelopathy Scale scores, loss of height and regional cervical lordosis angle, and complication rates of the 2 groups were compared. RESULTS The mean follow-up time was 20 months. In both groups, the VAS and European Myelopathy Scale scores improved significantly. The loss of height was 3.7% in patients with iliac grafts and 5.3% in patients with PEKK implants. The rates of osseous fusion were similar in Groups 1 and 2 (94.7% and 91.3%, respectively). At the end of the follow-up period, none of the patients complained about donor-site pain. One patient in Group 1 suffered a fracture of the iliac bone that required osteosynthesis. Four patients in Group 2 had to receive revision surgery for cage and/or plate-screw dislocation and new neurological deficit or intractable pain. CONCLUSIONS Preoperative pain and radicularand myelopathic symptoms improve after decompression irrespective of the material used for vertebral replacement. The use of PEKK cages for vertebral replacement seems to result in a higher risk of implant-related complications. A prospective randomized study is necessary to supply evidence for the use of autografts and artificial implants after anterior cervical corpectomy with fusion.
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- 2016
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13. Executive function deficits in pediatric cerebellar tumor survivors.
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Koustenis E, Hernáiz Driever P, de Sonneville L, and Rueckriegel SM
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- Adolescent, Ataxia etiology, Ataxia physiopathology, Ataxia psychology, Attention, Cerebellar Neoplasms physiopathology, Cerebellar Neoplasms surgery, Child, Female, Frontal Lobe physiopathology, Humans, Infratentorial Neoplasms physiopathology, Infratentorial Neoplasms surgery, Inhibition, Psychological, Intelligence Tests, Male, Memory, Short-Term, Mental Processes, Neoplasm Grading, Neuropsychological Tests, Reaction Time, Survivors, Cerebellar Neoplasms psychology, Executive Function, Infratentorial Neoplasms psychology
- Abstract
Background and Aims: Besides motor function the cerebellum subserves frontal lobe functions. Thus, we investigated executive functions in pediatric posterior fossa tumor survivors., Methods: We tested information processing, aspects of attention, planning and intelligence in 42 pediatric posterior fossa tumor survivors (mean age 14.63 yrs, SD 5.03). Seventeen low-grade tumor patients (LGCT) were treated with surgery only and 25 high-grade tumors patients (HGCT) received postsurgical adjuvant treatment. We evaluated simple reaction time, executive functioning, i.e. visuospatial memory, inhibition, and mental flexibility using the Amsterdam Neuropsychological Tasks program, whereas forward thinking was assessed with the Tower of London-test. Intelligence was determined using the Wechsler Intelligence Scale. Ataxia was assessed with the International Cooperative Ataxia Rating Scale., Results: About one third of each patient group showed forward thinking scores below one standard deviation of the norm. Impaired forward thinking correlated significantly with degree of ataxia (r = -0.39, p = 0.03) but not with fluid intelligence. Both patient groups exhibited executive function deficits in accuracy and reaction speed in more difficult tasks involving information speed and attention flexibility. Still, HGCT patients were significantly slower and committed more errors. Working memory was inferior in HGCT patients., Conclusion: Pediatric cerebellar tumor survivors with different disease and treatment related brain damage exhibit similar patterns of impairment in executive functioning, concerning forward thinking, inhibition and mental flexibility. The deficits are larger in high-grade tumor patients. The pattern of function loss seen in both groups is most probably due to comparable lesions to cerebro-cerebellar circuits that are known to modulate critical executive functions., (Copyright © 2015 European Paediatric Neurology Society. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2016
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14. Trauma- and distress-associated mental illness symptoms in close relatives of patients with severe traumatic brain injury and high-grade subarachnoid hemorrhage.
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Rueckriegel SM, Baron M, Domschke K, Neuderth S, Kunze E, Kessler AF, Nickl R, Westermaier T, and Ernestus RI
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- Adult, Aged, Depression epidemiology, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Quality of Life, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic epidemiology, Adaptation, Psychological, Brain Injuries psychology, Depression psychology, Family psychology, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic psychology, Subarachnoid Hemorrhage psychology
- Abstract
Background: Close relatives (CR) of patients with severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) and high-grade subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) suffer extraordinary distress during the treatment: Distress may lead to persisting mental illness symptoms within the spectrum of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), anxiety disorders, and depression. The primary goal of this study was to determine the prevalence and severity of these symptoms in CR. The secondary goal was identification of associated factors., Method: Standardized interviews were conducted with 53 CR (mean age of 57.7 ± 11.4 years) of patients with TBI °III (n = 27) and high-grade SAH H&H °III-V (n = 26) between 5 and 15 months after the event. The interviews contained a battery of surveys to quantify symptoms of PTSD, anxiety disorders, and depression, i.e., Impact of Event Scale (IES-R), 36-item Short-Form General Health Survey (SF-36), and Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS). Fixed and modifiable possibly influencing factors were correlated., Results: Twenty-eight CR (53 %) showed IES-R scores indicating a probable diagnosis of PTSD. Twenty-five CR (47 %) showed an increased anxiety score and 18 (34 %) an increased depression score using HADS. Mean physical component summary of SF-36 was not abnormal (49.1 ± 9.1), whereas mean mental component summary was under average (41.0 ± 13.2), indicating a decreased quality of life caused by mental effects. Perception of the interaction quality with the medical staff and involvement into medical decisions correlated negatively with severity of mental illness symptoms. Evasive coping strategies were highly significantly associated with symptoms., Conclusions: This study quantifies an extraordinarily high prevalence of mental illness symptoms in CR of patients with critical acquired brain injury due to SAH and TBI. Modifiable factors were associated with severity of mental illness symptoms. Prospective studies testing efficiency of early psychotherapeutic interventions are needed.
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- 2015
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15. Cerebral white matter fractional anisotropy and tract volume as measured by MR imaging are associated with impaired cognitive and motor function in pediatric posterior fossa tumor survivors.
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Rueckriegel SM, Bruhn H, Thomale UW, and Hernáiz Driever P
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- Adolescent, Anisotropy, Astrocytoma pathology, Ataxia etiology, Cerebellar Neoplasms complications, Cerebellar Neoplasms pathology, Child, Cognition Disorders etiology, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Infratentorial Neoplasms pathology, Intelligence Tests, Male, Medulloblastoma pathology, Neuropsychological Tests, Prognosis, Survival Rate, Survivors, Astrocytoma complications, Ataxia diagnosis, Cognition Disorders diagnosis, Diffusion Tensor Imaging methods, Infratentorial Neoplasms complications, Medulloblastoma complications, White Matter pathology
- Abstract
Background: Disease and therapy cause brain damage and subsequent functional loss in pediatric patients with posterior fossa tumors. Treatment-related toxicity factors are resection in patients with pilocytic astrocytoma (PA) and, additionally, cranio-spinal irradiation together with chemotherapy in patients with medulloblastoma (MB). We tested whether damage to white matter (WM) as revealed by diffusion tensor MR imaging (DTI) correlated with specific cognitive and motor impairments in survivors of pediatric posterior fossa tumors., Procedures: Eighteen MB (mean age ± SD, 15.2 ± 4.9 y) and 14 PA (12.6 ± 5.0 y) survivors were investigated with DTI on a 3-Tesla-MR system. We identified fractional anisotropy (FA) of WM, the volume ratio of WM to gray matter and cerebrospinal fluid (WM/GM + CSF), and volume of specific frontocerebellar tracts. Ataxia was assessed using the International Cooperative Ataxia Rating Scale (ICARS), while the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children determined full-scale intelligence quotients (FSIQ). Amsterdam Neuropsychological Tasks (ANT) was used to assess processing speed. Handwriting automation was analyzed using a digitizing graphic tablet., Results: The WM/GM + CSF ratio correlated significantly with cognitive measures (IQ, P = 0.002; ANT baseline speed, P = 0.04; ANT shifting attention, P = 0.004). FA of skeletonized tracts correlated significantly with FSIQ (P = 0.008), ANT baseline speed (P = 0.028) and ANT shifting attention (P = 0.045). Moreover, frontocerebellar tract volumes correlated with both the FSIQ (P = 0.011) and ICARS (P = 0.007)., Conclusion: DTI provides a method for quantification of WM damage by tumor and by therapy-associated effects in survivors of pediatric posterior fossa tumors. DTI-derived WM integrity may be a representative marker for cognitive and motor deterioration., (© 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
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- 2015
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16. Supratentorial neurometabolic alterations in pediatric survivors of posterior fossa tumors.
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Rueckriegel SM, Driever PH, and Bruhn H
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- Adolescent, Adult, Age Factors, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols therapeutic use, Aspartic Acid metabolism, Astrocytoma surgery, Brain radiation effects, Case-Control Studies, Cerebellar Neoplasms therapy, Chemoradiotherapy methods, Child, Child, Preschool, Creatine metabolism, Female, Humans, Infant, Infratentorial Neoplasms therapy, Leukoencephalopathies metabolism, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, Male, Medulloblastoma therapy, Phosphocreatine metabolism, Sex Factors, Young Adult, Aspartic Acid analogs & derivatives, Astrocytoma metabolism, Brain metabolism, Cerebellar Neoplasms metabolism, Infratentorial Neoplasms metabolism, Medulloblastoma metabolism
- Abstract
Purpose: Therapy and tumor-related effects such as hypoperfusion, internal hydrocephalus, chemotherapy, and irradiation lead to significant motor and cognitive sequelae in pediatric posterior fossa tumor survivors. A distinct proportion of those factors related to the resulting late effects is hitherto poorly understood. This study aimed at separating the effects of neurotoxic factors on central nervous system metabolism by using H-1 MR spectroscopy to quantify cerebral metabolite concentrations in these patients in comparison to those in age-matched healthy peers., Methods and Materials: Fifteen patients with World Health Organization (WHO) I pilocytic astrocytoma (PA) treated by resection only, 24 patients with WHO IV medulloblastoma (MB), who additionally received chemotherapy and craniospinal irradiation, and 43 healthy peers were investigated using single-volume H-1 MR spectroscopy of parietal white matter and gray matter., Results: Concentrations of N-acetylaspartate (NAA) were significantly decreased in white matter (p < 0.0001) and gray matter (p < 0.0001) of MB patients and in gray matter (p = 0.005) of PA patients, compared to healthy peers. Decreased creatine concentrations in parietal gray matter correlated significantly with older age at diagnosis in both patient groups (MB patients, p = 0.009, r = 0.52; PA patients, p = 0.006, r = 0.7). Longer time periods since diagnosis were associated with lower NAA levels in white matter of PA patients (p = 0.008, r = 0.66)., Conclusions: Differently decreased NAA concentrations were observed in both PA and MB groups of posterior fossa tumor patients. We conclude that this reflects a disturbance of the neurometabolic steady state of normal-appearing brain tissue due to the tumor itself and to the impact of surgery in both patient groups. Further incremental decreases of metabolite concentrations in MB patients may point to additional harm caused by irradiation and chemotherapy. The stronger decrease of NAA in MB patients may correspond to the additional damage of combined irradiation and chemotherapy on neuroaxonal cell viability and number., (Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2012
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17. Differences in supratentorial damage of white matter in pediatric survivors of posterior fossa tumors with and without adjuvant treatment as detected by magnetic resonance diffusion tensor imaging.
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Rueckriegel SM, Driever PH, Blankenburg F, Lüdemann L, Henze G, and Bruhn H
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- Adolescent, Anisotropy, Axons, Brain drug effects, Brain radiation effects, Case-Control Studies, Cerebellum drug effects, Cerebellum pathology, Cerebellum radiation effects, Chemotherapy, Adjuvant adverse effects, Child, Child, Preschool, Cranial Irradiation adverse effects, Female, Humans, Leukoencephalopathies etiology, Leukoencephalopathies pathology, Male, Radiotherapy, Adjuvant adverse effects, Astrocytoma pathology, Astrocytoma surgery, Brain pathology, Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Infratentorial Neoplasms drug therapy, Infratentorial Neoplasms pathology, Infratentorial Neoplasms radiotherapy, Infratentorial Neoplasms surgery, Medulloblastoma drug therapy, Medulloblastoma pathology, Medulloblastoma radiotherapy, Survivors
- Abstract
Purpose: To elucidate morphologic correlates of brain dysfunction in pediatric survivors of posterior fossa tumors by using magnetic resonance diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) to examine neuroaxonal integrity in white matter., Patients and Methods: Seventeen medulloblastoma (MB) patients who had received surgery and adjuvant treatment, 13 pilocytic astrocytoma (PA) patients who had been treated only with surgery, and age-matched healthy control subjects underwent magnetic resonance imaging on a 3-Tesla system. High-resolution conventional T1- and T2-weighted magnetic resonance imaging and DTI data sets were obtained. Fractional anisotropy (FA) maps were analyzed using tract-based spatial statistics, a part of the Functional MRI of the Brain Software Library., Results: Compared with control subjects, FA values of MB patients were significantly decreased in the cerebellar midline structures, in the frontal lobes, and in the callosal body. Fractional anisotropy values of the PA patients were not only decreased in cerebellar hemispheric structures as expected, but also in supratentorial parts of the brain, with a distribution similar to that in MB patients. However, the amount of significantly decreased FA was greater in MB than in PA patients, underscoring the aggravating neurotoxic effect of the adjuvant treatment., Conclusions: Neurotoxic mechanisms that are present in PA patients (e.g., internal hydrocephalus and damaged cerebellar structures affecting neuronal circuits) contribute significantly to the alteration of supratentorial white matter in pediatric posterior fossa tumor patients., (Copyright (c) 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2010
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18. Loss of fine motor function correlates with ataxia and decline of cognition in cerebellar tumor survivors.
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Rueckriegel SM, Blankenburg F, Henze G, Baqué H, and Driever PH
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Age Factors, Biomechanical Phenomena, Child, Female, Humans, Intelligence, Male, Risk Factors, Astrocytoma psychology, Ataxia psychology, Cerebellar Neoplasms psychology, Cognition, Medulloblastoma psychology, Motor Activity
- Abstract
Background: Motor and cognitive function losses resemble handicaps in pediatric posterior fossa tumor survivors. Several factors determine type and extent of impairment. We quantified loss of fine motor function and its association with ataxia and intelligence in patients with and without adjuvant treatment., Procedure: Fine motor function, extent of ataxia and cognitive function were assessed in 25 medulloblastoma (MB) and 16 cerebellar pilocytic astrocytoma (PA) patients at least 1 year after completion of therapy. Kinematic parameters (speed, automation, variability, and pressure) of different movement complexity levels were investigated employing a digitizing graphic tablet. Degree of ataxia was quantified using the International Cooperative Ataxia Rating Scale and cognition was determined using the Wechsler Intelligence Scale., Results: Kinematic parameters of low and high complexity tasks as well as ataxia of MB patients were strongly impaired. Fine motor impairment was weaker in PA patients, but still evident in the complex task of writing. Ataxia was significantly more pronounced in medulloblastoma patients. Young age and short recovery time correlated significantly with impaired kinematic parameters. Ataxia was strongly associated with inferior fine motor function. Cognition, especially performance IQ, was associated with dysfunctional kinematic parameters., Conclusion: The digitizing tablet detected extent of fine motor function loss at varying levels of complexity of pediatric cerebellar tumor survivors. This tool promises to be a potentially effective method for measuring fine motor function in clinical trials and may be helpful in studying mechanisms of neurotoxicity in posterior fossa tumor patients as well as success of rehabilitation., ((c) 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc.)
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Influence of age and movement complexity on kinematic hand movement parameters in childhood and adolescence.
- Author
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Rueckriegel SM, Blankenburg F, Burghardt R, Ehrlich S, Henze G, Mergl R, and Hernáiz Driever P
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Biomechanical Phenomena physiology, Brain growth & development, Child, Female, Hand innervation, Handwriting, Humans, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted methods, Male, Reaction Time physiology, Sex Characteristics, Teaching, Aging physiology, Functional Laterality physiology, Hand physiology, Motor Skills physiology, Movement physiology, Physical Fitness physiology
- Abstract
Development of fine motor functions, especially drawing and handwriting, are crucial for performance in school, autonomy in everyday life and the general human development. A variety of neurological and psychiatric conditions in childhood and adolescence stunt the normal development of fine motor skills. We sought to define the normal development of the kinematic parameters of fine motor movement and determine the influence of gender, laterality of handedness and extracurricular training on fine motor skills. One hundred and eighty-seven children and adolescents (mean age: 11.6 years (+/-S.D.: 3.58), range: 6-18 years) were included in the study. Participants performed drawing and handwriting tasks on a digitizing graphic tablet. Movement and pressure data were transferred to a computer using a sensor-equipped pen and post-processed using CSWIN. Movements were segmented into strokes and several kinematic parameters were calculated. The kinematic parameters that were analyzed represented speed (frequency and stroke peak velocity), automation (number of direction changes of velocity per stroke), variability (variation coefficient of stroke peak velocity) and pressure. Progression of kinematic parameters for each movement domain of the handwriting and circle drawing tasks correlated significantly with age (Pearson's correlation, p<0.003). Speed, automation and pressure increased with age, whereas variability decreased. Nonlinear regressions revealed maturation of hand movements at a certain age. Age of completed maturation depended on the task complexity (drawing circles vs. handwriting) and kinematic parameters. In the speed and automation domains, handwriting movements finish maturing later than circle drawing. Male subjects drew circles at significantly higher speeds than female subjects. Fine motor practice and laterality of handedness did not influence kinematic parameters. A repeated measure ANOVA confirmed the significant interdependency between age and complexity level for speed and automation (p<0.001). The digitizing graphic tablet is an extremely valuable tool in determining the normal development of hand movement skills of children and adolescents by measuring relevant daily tasks like handwriting and drawing. In our study, we showed that future analyses of impaired movement in children and adolescents need to take age and gender into consideration. Furthermore, differences were observed in the maturation of different task complexities, the complex fine motor function reaching maturity later than basic and repetitive movement patterns.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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